Coast Guard fines man $5.000 for jumping off charter fishing vessel

SAN FRANCISCO — The Coast Guard issued a $5,000 fine to a passenger that jumped from the charter fishing vessel Bass Tub into the waters off Muir Beach June 22, 2015.

The passenger allegedly jumped off the vessel as part of a dare from his friends who were also aboard the vessel. The vessel’s crew safely recovered the jumper, who was not injured.

Jumping into the water from a passenger vessel, such as a tour boat or ferry, is not only dangerous for the person jumping, but it endangers the lives of others as well. Commercial passenger vessel crews are responsible for the safety of all passengers aboard their vessels, and in this case, their attention was diverted away from the safe operation of the vessel when they were forced to retrieve the jumper from the water. Jumpers are at risk because they could get sucked into the vessel’s propellers or drown from the effects of cold water shock, swimming failure and hypothermia.

The act of jumping into the water from a passenger vessel is considered interfering with the safe operation of the vessel, which is a violation of 46 United States Code, Section 2302. Depending on the circumstances of the violation, the penalty for violating this law is a fine of up to $30,000.